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DoN. Nichols
 
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In article ,
Dave Hinz wrote:
On 22 Apr 2005 07:06:08 -0700, wrote:
How do you drill with a lathe?


I do that by holding the drill bit in the tail piece, (either a chuck
with the right taper, or a drillbit with the right taper), and the piece
being drilled in the chuck (or held to a faceplate, I suppose). Works
very well for then tapping that hole, to make sure it's exactly aligned
with the hole you just drilled.


You can also put the chuck (with a Morse taper adaptor sleeve)
into the headstock, and put the workpiece between the drill bit and a
drilling pad in the tailstock. There are even drilling pads with a V
groove to help you to drill straight through the side of a cylindrical
workpiece. IIRC, they are called a "drill crotch". This works when
what you are drilling is too long in a radial distance from the center
of the hole to be to mount it in a 4-jaw chuck or on a faceplate.

Look at it this way - lots of metalworking is done by rotating one thing
while another thing is held still. Either the tool rotates, or the work
rotates. It doesn't matter which is moving, it's just the relative
movement between the two that makes it work. Figure out how to hold the
tool, figure out how to hold the work, and make some chips.


Indeed so.

Enjoy,
DoN.

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